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Anonymous
Posted June 28, 2012
Would recomend this book to everyone. I really enjoyed it
Anonymous
Posted April 10, 2012
Being somewhat of a local to the area where these events occurred, I have stopped many times at the Sunshine mine memorial. I was happy to finally find Gregg Olsen's recounting of the disaster and its impact on the communities surrounding the mine. And I was not disappointed with the way he told the story. This is one of my favorite true-life books!
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Posted April 25, 2006
Once you get past the 'set up', the story moves quickly and graphically. I could not put it down once I got going, much like the........... read it for yourself.
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Posted January 10, 2006
The 'Deep Dark' by Gregg Olsen provides a factual and haunting view into the human side of the Sunshine Mine Disaster where 91 miners died underground in May of 1972. I worked at the mine in the early 80's when the community was still recovering from the tragedy. Olsen does expetional work on a subject that is both highly interesting as a story, and highly insightful as to the culture and deep loss felt in the tight knit Silver Valley Mining District of Northern Idaho.
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Posted July 29, 2005
I am from Kellogg, Bigcreek, and grew up at the Bigcreek Store (my parents owned before George Deitz). We knew many many of the miners who died and their families. The Deep Dark has given me an insight that I would never have imagined! It has left me thinking every day about what happened over those days. Thank you for the efforts you put into depicting the lives and the families--miners are rough as you say but they are some of the most wonderful people in the world and, it is an honor to be able to say 'I grew up with these men and their families' Thank you Gregg Olsen.
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Posted June 29, 2005
I bought this book several weeks ago on a friend's recommendation on a book recommendation board. This is what my friend had to say: 'This story is the true story of the 1972 Sunshine Mine fire in which 91 men lost their lives. The worst hardrock mine disaster in the largest silver mine in America. When I first picked up the book, I scoffed, 'Oh yeah, an outsider is going to try and write 'our' story. It can't be done.' Because no one could possibly understand what we all went through during this time. But from Mullen to Rose Lake, Olsen has captured the 'Valley' and 'my' people in all their primitive glory. He actually succeeded in making me proud of them and where I was born for a change. Warning: Olsen didn't pull any punches, the story is horrifically graphic in detail. You'll not only feel the weight of the darkness and tons of earth above you... you'll feel the fear, heart break, grief and pain of each wife, son, daughter, relative and friend left alone above ground. You may still not fully understand what makes a man want to be a 'miner' afterwards, but you'll get a damn good introduction to the breed.' Well, the book was everything my friend said above and more. Truly an excellent work of non-fiction written as a mystery. Hundreds and hundreds of hours of interviews with survivors, the kin of the dead, mine personnel and mine management, people at the former U.S. Bureau of Mines and so on fleshed out a gut-ripping story. By the time you reach the penultimate page with the listing of the dead I guarantee you will be in tears, not only because you have grown to care very much about these men, flawed or valiant as they are (or both) but because of the hideous, needless way in which they died. This book is a must read for anyone who wants not only a gripping story of men in their worst and best hours, but a story of how one horrid entirely preventable event shot down a department of government in flames and changed an entire industry.
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Posted April 21, 2005
The Sunshine Mine fire robbed me of a Grandfather and an Uncle before I was born. Luckly, my Uncle Delmar survive this tragic event. I couldn't amagine my life with out him in it. My Mother would often talk about days they stood out side the mine waiting to hear but so much of the rest had not been told. And asking my Uncle was just too painful for him, even after all those years. Gregg Olsen's book gave me a real insight into what my family had gone through. His 'real time' story telling put you right in the moment. I read the book in two days, but I spent many days after comprehending the pain and suffering they all had endured. I know the Kitchen family is very thankful that he wrote this book.
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Posted April 2, 2005
A great read! This book made me care about the men and women (and their kids) who were caught up in a terrible mining disaster in Kellogg, Idaho. No one thought they were in danger because of a fire in a hard rock mine. Sadly, they were wrong. The author kept me turning the pages well into the night. A great book about working men and their lives. 'The Deep Dark' reminded me of 'A Perfect Storm', which I also recommend.
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Posted March 14, 2005
this was one of the best written book's in a long time you wont read a book with more truth's and fact's it has been a long time comeing and a story that needed to be told once i started to read it i couldent put it down as i was there on that day thanks again gregg
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Posted March 14, 2005
It was so long ago yet it only seems like yesterday. The Deep Dark: was able to shake loose a lot of locked up memories that I had suppressed, for it was a very dismal time that I wanted to forget. The Deep Dark adds another dimension to the lurid lifes of hard rock mining. I hope that all who read it, enjoy the book as much as I did.
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Posted March 14, 2005
I had preconceived notions when I started reading this book...1) I grew up in Kellogg and was a young boy when the Sunshine Mine disaster happened...2) I worked in the Sunshine during college and 3) I am Gregg's friend. After reading the first fifty pages, all that I had known about the fire, the mine, the people and all I knew about Gregg and his writing were undone and turned upside down. This is a monumental work by a voice that sounds like it lived through this disaster. Gregg is a remarkable story-teller, capturing the essence of the hard rock miner, the character of the time and town and the pain of what is still a fresh loss for many of us. But, his work is like a balm as well. It brings closure. It brings together the pieces of a drama that had been long forgotten. He challenges us to explore the lives touched, the decisions made, the heros, the victims and ultimately ourselves. This is a great read for anybody who enjoys true-life drama. It unfolds like the best of novels, taking the reader along for a terror ride. It will not disappoint.
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Posted March 14, 2005
This true battle for life makes a Bruce Willis or Harrison Ford action movie mere childs play. Olsen's writing's brilliance places you in the very midst of a terrible fight for life, with hundreds of your newly found close friends and acquaintances. Once you put on your gear and travel more than a mile underground you will not be able to leave, until the book is done. You will have put in a full shift of hard physical and emotional labor, whether you choose to be in the fray or topside praying with your neighbors. Olsen's writing will guide you through the confusion and terror at a pace and with such intensity that you will have never thought possible. You will not recover quickly, or perhaps ever, from the experience but it is one that you should not let get away.
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Posted March 6, 2005
Enter The Deep Dark at your own risk! Gregg Olsen takes you by the hand as you enter the depths of a hard rock mine. What could go wrong ¿ fire? No way ¿ what could burn, rock? So knew the workers and managers of the Sunshine Mine. This is visceral writing ¿ once the fire and smoke start - I started coughing, choking and looking for a way out myself ¿ I was so relieved to escape at the end of the book, and you will be too. What makes this so moving is the way the author brings you into the world of the hard rock miner, but also brings to life the family members - their fear and myriad emotions as the disaster unfolds. I got to know them, and care. At the end of the book I felt lucky to have survived. Simply great writing ¿ I am now looking for more of Gregg Olsen¿s books. Roger Tribble
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Posted April 28, 2005
Mining made the Pacific Northwest rich. It also changed lives and took lives, and nowhere is that more movingly told than in 'The Deep Dark.' I read the book twice, once quickly to find out what really happened during the Sunshine Mine disaster on May 2, 1972, and then to relive it again, step by step and hour by hour. Interestingly enough, I found the saddest part of this whole terrible tragedy to be the stories that Olsen tells in the aftermath...in finding out what happened to the families of those who died as well as the survivors and the burdens they bore even though they made it through the smoke and the fire. This is a true page turner, told with not only an intimate knowledge of the world of hard-rock mining but with a compelling compassion as well. One of the best historical accounts books I've ever read, meticulously organized and educational as well. I'll remember what those men went through long after I turned the last page of 'The Deep Dark.'
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Posted March 29, 2005
Gregg Olsen truly brings across not only the Disaster of The Sunshine Mine, but he also caputres the code of the miners life, the life of being in a mining town, and belonging to a mining family. I work with some of the relatives of the men in this book to this day, and I plan to let them all know they would be missing something very profound if they don't read 'The Deep Dark'
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Posted July 28, 2011
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Anonymous
Posted October 16, 2012
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